Sermon by Pastor Johnson, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
Text: Luke 16:30 "'No,
father Abraham,' he said, 'but if someone from the dead goes to them, they
will repent.' 31 "He said to him, 'If they do not
listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone
rises from the dead.'"
INTRODUCTION: My dear friends in Christ, in an old Mel Brooks
movie, "Life Stinks," Brooks plays wealthy businessman,
Goddard Bolt. Goddard Bolt has the very best of everything money could buy.
[Video He rides in a chauffeur driven limousine. He's
wealthy and his sights are set on making more. His plan is to tear down some
old downtown buildings and construct a modern complex with luxury
condominiums and a mall.] "What about the people living
down there?" one of his employees asks him. "What people?"
Goddard Bolt asks, "There are only old deserted buildings."
What he doesn't take into account are the homeless people living in those
"old deserted buildings" and in the alleys. Goddard Bolt
doesn’t take into account anything beyond his money and wealth.
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I. Jesus told
a parable about a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived
in absolute luxury. A first century version of Goddard Bolt.
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A. He is unnamed in our parable, but tradition has
given him the name “Dives,” which just means rich in Latin.
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1. Perhaps Dives was there
every Sabbath in the synagogue sitting in his place of honor as one of the
pillars of the congregation. Perhaps he heard the Word every Sabbath because
that’s where everyone else was and no one was doing business.
2. But, like the Pharisees to whom
this parable was addressed, Dives didn't pay attention to the Word of God
which teaches that God is our help, our only
hope for salvation.
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B. At the rich man’s gate lay a beggar
named Lazarus. Lazarus was covered with sores. He longed to eat even the
scraps that fell from the rich man’s table. He lay there day after day in
misery.
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1. However,
there came a time when the rich man did notice Lazarus. “The time came
when the beggar died, and the angels carried him to Abraham’s side.”
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a. The rich man also died but he
didn’t go to Abraham’s side. Instead he found himself in hell. From this
realm of torment, he looked up and he saw Abraham far away.
b. Then the rich man couldn’t believe
his eyes. There at Abraham’s side was this poor beggar who had lain outside
his gate, this man of no importance, this man of no consequence, Lazarus. But
while the rich man languished in hell, Lazarus was in glory.
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2. Now this is a parable. In
this parable the rich man could look into heaven, And he could call out to
Abraham, which he did. But this is a point made for the lesson being taught,
not necessarily what we would experience.
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a. “Father Abraham, have pity on me,”
he cried. “Send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my
tongue, because I am in agony in this fire.” The rich man still didn’t
get it, did he? He still thought Lazarus ought to serve him. He was
absolutely clueless about the way the kingdom of God works. He still
could not see that God is our help.
b. Abraham reminds the rich man that
in this world he had many nice things while Lazarus had none. And besides, he
says, there is a chasm between heaven and hell that cannot be bridged. In
other words, it was too late for the rich man. His fate was sealed. He had
turned his head too many times in ignoring the Word that said that God is our
help.
c. The rich man still didn’t get it. “Then
I beg you, father,” he cried, “Send Lazarus to my father’s house, for
I have five brothers. Let him warn them, so that they will not also come to
this place of torment.” Abraham replied, “They have Moses and
the Prophets; let them listen to them.” “No, father Abraham, said
the rich man, “but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will repent.”
Abraham said, “If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they
will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.”
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II. You see, the Word is all we need to bring us to
know that God is our help.
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A. But so often we are like that rich
man, so distracted by all around us. God in His Word, though, is always
trying to get us to wake up to Him.
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1. Lloyd Ogilvie tells ...
of a father who knelt down to tuck his little boy
into bed. It was time for prayers. The little boy began his childhood prayer
which he had repeated so many times before: "Now I lay me down to
sleep; I pray the Lord my soul to keep. If I should die before I wake, I pray
the Lord my soul to take." On this night, however, the words got
mixed up and the child inadvertently spoke words of the greatest wisdom he
would ever know. He prayed: "If I should wake before I die. . .
." Then he stopped in embarrassment and apologized, "Oh,
Daddy, I got all mixed up." Wisely, his father responded, "Not
at all, son; that is the first time that prayer was properly prayed. My
deepest longing for you is that you may wake up before you die."
In a way this text is calling for us to wake up
before we die for, indeed, some of us are asleep in some of the most critical
areas of our life.
2. Through this parable Jesus is
trying to wake us up to know that He reverses our common perceptions.
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a. For example, remember that the rich
man is nameless. Even in our world rich people are known by name and by face.
We see them on television programs showing off their luxury homes. We see
their faces on magazine covers in the supermarket. We know who they are.
b. The poor, on the other hand, are
often nameless. We don't know their names or their faces. In this parable the
poor man ends up alongside of Abraham while the rich man ends up in
Hades. Why? Because the rich man measured God’s favor by
his comfort, clothes and food, he did not listen to the Word about his lack
of true riches—faith and salvation. Because he was a descendant of
Abraham, he saw no need to believe the Word that Abraham believed. And
the poor man measured God’s favor by His
promises in the word.
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B. At the end of his life Luther said
“We are all beggars, this is true.” We are all Lazarus –
helpless and hopeless in our poverty, sick unto death, longing to even eat
the crumbs that fall from God’s table. Lazarus is each of us, and unless we
see ourselves in him, we cannot be saved. We won’t want to be saved.
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1. Unlike the rich man in the parable,
Jesus comes to us in our poverty. “Though He was rich, yet for our sakes,
He became poor that we through His poverty might become rich.” He came to
us in the poverty of our sin and death. He came to us, we who are condemned
to an eternity in hell. He came to us when we were unable to help ourselves.
He took on our weak and diseased and fallen humanity, and He lifted us up
from the curb and brought us to His house and washed our wounds with His
Baptism and gave us a seat at His table:
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a. not as pathetic beggars but as
beloved friends,
b. not as strangers but as one of the
family,
c. not to eat the crumbs that fall
from the table but to feast on the abundance of salvation that Jesus has won
for us.
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2. In our movie example Goddard Bolt
made a wager he could survive 30 days in the slums among the people he didn’t
see as worthy to be noticed. [Video] Goddard Bolt was changed by
his experience in the slums, but we are changed by something more sure, God’s
word.
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a. We have the sure prophetic Word. We
are blessed to live in the last days. Now we not only have Moses and the
prophets, but we have the apostles and evangelists. We know how this whole
thing comes out. We know how Jesus died to bear the sin of the world; how He
became the least and the loser for all of us, losing His life to win us.
b. And the good news is that Jesus has
joined us here, among the dogs, the outcasts, the losers. A beggar to save
the beggars. We have the Word made flesh. Yes, certainly faith comes by
hearing the Word of Christ. Hear it. Our sins are forgiven in Jesus. Your
death is destroyed in Jesus. Hell has no power over you in Jesus.
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III. And
this text warns us of that which would distract us from the Word. It
warns us not to trust in our comfort level, our labels or what we see. It bids us to hear the Word of God and believe it.
That Word points us to our Savior who will not fail us.
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A. Are you afflicted? Troubled?
Worried? Sick? Most uncomfortable?
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1. Old Adam will use these things to
convince you that God has no love for you. Your sinful nature will use your
exhaustion, hurt and circumstances to say that the Lord does not know you.
But we are not to listen to Old Adam, our circumstances or our fatigue to
know God’s will.
2. Instead, we are to listen to
His Word. His Word tells us this: That God certainly does love you and He
does know you. Why? Because of Christ.
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a. Out of love for us, our Savior was
afflicted, beaten and troubled. He bore our sins, sicknesses and infirmities
to the cross for us, in our place; there He died with them, taking them to
the grave.
b. He rose conquering death for us –
so we like Lazarus will one day see heaven.
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B. Learn about Him from His Word.
Cling to His promises, all the more when you are afflicted. Look to the
altar, because there He gives you His body and blood for the forgiveness of
sins.
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1. Look to His Word because There the
Lord gives you forgiveness and faith and eternal life. And because there He
promises, “I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”
2. God’s Word opens our eyes to see
the treasures of the kingdom of God. It helps us see how rich we are with
God’s love for us in Jesus his Son. God’s Word is the only way to open the
hearts of people and lead them to believe and accept these treasures.
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CONCLUSION: We are all Lazarus – whose God is
our help. God has noticed us and helped us through Jesus. He has
brought us to wake up and to know our help in in Him. He has brought us
into His house and fed us with heavenly food. Now He has made us like
Him – He has made us to notice others and to give out His Word to them, so
they know how He notices them, too. We are brought to give out the
treasures of heaven for others. We are brought to be servants as we
have been served by Jesus. We are brought to be changed men and women
in a better way than Godard Bolt. Now we are brought to resist being
overly distracted by the stuff and concerns of this world and to notice His
Word and our fellow beggars. God is
our help and we become the help for other beggars. Amen.
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